While
we are still talking about chemical weapons....
New
Zealand Confirms Supplying Agent Orange in Vietnam War
New
Zealand supplied Agent Orange chemicals to the United States military
during the Vietnam war, a government minister has revealed.
Sculptural works by Vietnamese students representing disabled child victims of the defoliant Agent Orange used by US army during the Vietnam War(AFP/file) |
9
January, 2005
The
disclosure led to immediate claims that New Zealand was in breach of
the Geneva convention and could face a flood of lawsuits from
veterans and Vietnamese
Transport
Minister Harry Duynhoven said the highly toxic chemical was sent to a
United States base in the Philippines during the 1960s.
"The
information that has been given to me is that products used to make
Agent Orange were shipped from New Plymouth to Subic Bay in the
Philippines," he told the Sunday News newspaper.
After
nearly three decades of official denials, a high-level parliamentary
committee formally acknowledged late last year that New Zealand
soldiers in the Vietnam War were significantly exposed to Agent
Orange, but no mention was ever made that the country was a supplier.
Although
the National Party was in power during the Vietnam War, Duynhoven
said his current Labour government was responsible for setting the
record straight.
"Any
government has to deal with the situation it finds itself in and it's
always a problem if previous governments leave a mess."
Veterans
spokesman John Moller said the government must compensate ex-soldiers
and their families, some of whom have suffered generations of health
problems.
"It's
bloody unacceptable what the New Zealand government has done to us
and the other countries involved in the war," he said.
"Through
their deceit, cover-up and negligence, the New Zealand government has
the blood of thousands of Kiwis, Vietnamese, Australians and
Americans on their hands."
Under
the Geneva Convention, countries cannot be party to chemical warfare
and must declare the use or supply of defoliants during conflicts.
The
vice-chancellor of Canterbury University, Scott Davidson, an
authority on international law, said the government had left itself
open to lawsuits from Vietnamese.
US
lawyer Constantine Kokkoris, who represents Vietnamese victims of
Agent Orange, said he may sue the New Zealand government.
"It
is my intention at this time to look into the possibility of bringing
a class against against the New Zealand government," he told the
Sunday News from his New York office.
Davidson
said if negotiations between Kokkoris and the government broke down,
the United Nations could be called on to find a setting for a court
case.
From
1961 to 1971, the US and South Vietnamese military sprayed millions
of litres of toxic herbicides, mainly Agent Orange, over South
Vietnam to destroy the vegetation used by communist forces for cover
and food.
Hanoi
says the defoliant has caused health problems for more than one
million Vietnamese and continues to have devastating consequences.
A
study released in August last year by scientists from the United
States, Germany and Vietnam found that Agent Orange was still
contaminating people through their food.
Dioxin,
the defoliant's deadly component, can cause an increased risk of
cancers, immunodeficiencies, reproductive and developmental changes,
nervous system problems and other health problems, according to
medical experts
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